The Key West Citizen Newspaper, August 17, 1936, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR eb0ebee e -: SOCIETY --: i © 000000 00000000000000000000S0S0OS200SE0OEROOOCCES Enjoyable Party Given On Saturday John J. Romero, 3rd, who re- eently arrived to spend his vaca- tion with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs, Harry Lowe, at thi home, 1013 Southard street, and other relatives, was pleasantly surprised Saturday afternoon with a party in honor of his eleventh birthday anniversary. Various games were playe¢, in- cluding tailing the donkey and name contest. Prizes were won by James Kel- ley, Rosalie La Fe, Birdie Lou Lowe and Gary Thompson: Delicious refreshments served, consisting of cake, cream and candy. John J. was the many useful gifts. Guests included: Phyliss E. Cruz, Nellie Louise Tift, Mildred May Tift, Nellie Corrine Mencn- dez. Bobbie Sawyer, wete jee recipient of Carlisle Wil- eeee SESCCCCOECECO 70deeses THE WEA Coeeboccsccosessos Temperatures* Highest | Lowest : Mean For John Romero *™ Mean . | Rainfali* liams, Jr., Eugene Seoutng,| esterday’ Precipitation [Everett Sweeting, Rex, Hawkins, | Normal Precipitation -... Kenneth Cutry, Maureen McFar lane, Rosalie La Fe, Sara Bertha Lowe, Birdee Lou Lowe, Pat Ann Bethel,“Gary Thompson, Ed- ward Shephard, June Shephard. { Galey Sweeting, Louis Lowe, | | Elizabeth Shepphard, Eugene} { Sweeting, Jr., Sidney Lowe, James! iKelley, Kermit Sweeting, Benj. Lowe, Jr., Buddy Roberts. Misses Lu‘o Cuervo, Sarah Ann Birs, Leota Lowe, Alice Jane Lowe. Mesdames Bernard Cruz, Rod- man Bethel, Ferris Lowe, Reynold Thompson, James Shepphard, Ber-| Key West and Vicinity: Partly tie Higgs, Robert Lowe, Nett'c | cloudy with scattered showers to- Parks, Joseph Menendez, Harry; night or Tuesday; getitle to mod- Sawyer, John J. Romero, Jr. lerate easterly winds. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lowe, Mr.| Florida: Partly cloudy, scatter- and Mrs. Joseph H. Lowe, Mr. and | ed thundershowers Tuesday and Mrs. Rex Hawkins and Mr. andj near extreme south and extreme Mrs. Wm. A. Crosby. northeast coasts tonight or Tues- day. 8 i f 2 4 -16 Ins, Moon sets .. Tomorrow's High Low Barometer Sea level, 29.96, WEATHER FORECAST (Till 8 p. m., Tuesday) Large Crowd See “The Benders” One of the largest crowds of; the season attended the dance at; Raul’s Club on Roosevelt Boule- vard Saturday night. A good floor show was present- ed in 4 acts at which time the first presentation of “The Bend- ers”, acrobatic and tap-dancing team, was made by Abelardo Lo-| pez, Jr., manager of the team and; master of ceremonies. “The Benders” will appear in another presentation Wednesday evening at the invitational dance being given by Young Democratic Club. ee County for the big! Jacksonville to Florida Straits} and st Gulf: Gentle to moder- ate easterly winds over south por- tion and gentle variable winds | For Membership Dance over north portion; partly over- Over 300 invitations have been) cast weather tonight and Tuesday issued to members and friends of! with a few scattered showers, the Young Democratic Club Issue Invitations of} WEATHER CONDITIONS Menibership Dance to be given! 4 tropical disturbaitee of mod- Wednesday evening at Habana-|crate tntensity was central this | Madrid Club. ‘morning about 225 miles east; Music for this event will be} southeast of Brownsville, Texas, | furnished by Ceasar La Mbnaca’s; moving west. or west-northwest orchestra which is here with the| and attended by fresh shifting | National Guard encampment. j winds and squalls over a_consid- This is strictly an invitational; erable area and strong winds over affair and admittance to the club}, small area near the center. In- | on this night will be by presenta-| dications are that the disturbance | tion of invitation will move inland near Brownsville | late tonight o: early Tuesday. PERSONAL MENTION Northeast storm warnings are dis- played on the Texas st from} Brownsville to Corpus Christi, ABOVE LEFT: Passing motor ists report highway accident to nearby emergency first aid sta- tion. Note police car at left, its driver a Red Cross trained first aider — one of the mobile ©. :t aid units organized to enat = persons injured in traffic ac: - dents to receive prompt emcr- gency treatment. First did sta- tions and highway patrol bridce the gap between accident and arfival of a plysician. IE Red Cress has forged 2 new link in its chain of ighway urst aid stations established to br:»g im- mediate emergency care to readside crash victims. Thirty-two Delaware state high- way maintenance trucks comprise the first unit of the Red Cross motorized highway patrol, organized to complement the organization’s emergency highway “first aid sta- tions. It is planned to eguip and give first aid training to the erews of sev- eral thotisand trucks of state high- way and public utility grouns, since these vehicles are eotstantly on ““/ARMY WILL MEET INTRODUCES Anniversaries se OA 0662600600000 Motorized Units ee Beale Posts Give Red Cross First Aid to Injured duty on the nation’s traffic ‘arteries. ~ Numerous groups in a number of states are now prepared to launch similar highway patrols under Red Cross jurisdiction, and the highway Police of eight: states have finished Red Cross first aid training and will soon augment these mobile units. National Safety Council figures shew that last year motor accidents claimed 37,000 lives. This appalling total would have been less if more of the victims had receivéd emer- gency treatment at the scene of acci- dent while the doctor was on the NATIONAL GUARD MONDAY, AUG Sbececccecesosesesecer NATIONAL GUARD CLASSIFIED ARRIVES TODAT COLUMN eeceece WANTED WANTED—! X, The Citiz FOR RENT rNIS Mo. FIVE - ROOM F APARTMENT veniences SAL=ZSMAN WANTED ABOVE RIGHT: Trained per- Sonnel of highway first aid sta- | tions know what to do when an A emergency arises. A quick call )@ * for ambulance or doctor is made possible by an up-to-date list of nearby hospitals and physi- cians. LEFT: Many first aid ar posts are established at rural wanTED TO fire stations, whose trucks serve as as mobile first aid units when @ crash occurs some distance from the station. djusters, M WANTED TO RENT Apartme bu The Red Cross has already estab- lished 900 highway emergency first aid stations on thr h routes rural areas, and an additional will soon be in operation. The w meaning but helpless bystande the scene of accident will be by the first aider, t fractures, stop blee for shock. The Amerivan Red Cross dedi- cates its first aid posts and mobile units to the motorist of to: tomorrow who may be injure point where inedical attention can not be immediately secu: single, double, | NEW ~ PERMANENT WAVE RUSSELL’S Cigar Store and southeast warnings north of! ast 1786—David Crockett, Tennes-| Corpus ‘Christi to Matagorda. . : ae | Mrs. Tomasine Miler, beauty !see pioneer, frontiersman, indian i PO9COOOO HAM FOOEMOOEOROHOOOOOOOOOOFED LE BCDED00%0O8 Arrangements have been made! ACKSONVILLE John C. Key, port steward of the P. and O. 8. S. company at Miami, was an arrival on the Flo- rida this morning from Tampa. Mrs. A. L. Moore, of Atlanta, |Ga., arrived this morning on the Florida from Tampa, and is the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. ; Wm. W. Demeritt at the residence Seattered showers and thunder-j storms have oceufred during the lat 24 hours ove} the eastern half of the country, being heavy at Mi- ami, Fla., 1.70 inches, and there fighter, popular congressman, | born in Hawkins Co., Tenn. Died at thé Alamo, Tex., Mar. 6, 1836. i 1835—Peter Collier, the Uni-} for a diamondball game tomorrow night 8 o’clock at Bayview Park between the local Army aggrega- tion and Battery B, visiting Na- tional Guardsmen, according to DAILY BASEBALL RETURNS SY WIRE expert at 407 South street, is this ; Week introdue'’ng a new Ray Perm- faent Wave, which is put in with ino electricty or machinery. | This new wave is cool and com- FLORIDA CHARLEE GRRER. Menage YOUR indwiduel comion end enteremme= fs 0 matter of great umporarce at + announcement made today. |fortable, Mrs. Miller states, and The Army will use Speedball/has proven popular wherever Ortega on the firing line, with W. ! introduced. "| Powell on the receiving end. | The Army boys state that they fee! confident that they can take | Leuis! the Guardsmen into camp, while} - steel |e visiting team has not been! ae Cigars, Cigarettes, Soft heard from as to how they eeel SMALL TOWN GIRL j af , Enc | Matinee: Balco: 2 op-| - |about the outcome. Nevertheless TO cirking good gama’. belie: i eee hereon | sguezarem W = on Whitehead street. Mrs. Lovick Ley and son John, have also been light showers 2 ae of Vermont’s of Miami, arrived last week and portions of the central Rocky are guests of Mrs. Ley’s mother,} Miss Isabelle Peacock, daughter| Mountain and northern Plains; cultural chemist, born at Ch Mrs, Amelia Olivieri, They will! of Mr. and Mrs, Harry B. Peacock, States. Temperatures are above|tenango, N. Y. Died June 2 remain while the Florida is run-'was an arrival in Key West|"°rmal this morging in the north-| 1896. ning between Tampa, Key West] Saturday evening over the high- ern Rockies, Plains States, Mis- and Havana, way for a visit with relatives and| ‘issippi Valley and North Atlantie friends States, and are generally season- : jable in southeastern districts. Maximum temperatures of 100 to 104 degrees occurred yesterday in the southern Plains States, north- 'ern Texds, and the middle Mis- sissippi_ Valley. G@. 8, KENNEDY, Official in Charge. SPECIAL SALE ENDS TUESDAY In closing Mendell’: First Sale tomorrow evening, the manager of ‘this popular men’s shop has de e and U. S. Dept. of Agriculture’s noted agi sults BASEBALL LEAGUES | MONROE THEATER | Janet Gaynor-Robert Tuslor j if ‘ 1836—John Sceullin, St 1) financie', railroad builder, manufacturer and stieet-car erator, born near Helena N. i Died May 28, 1920. i vate jed forward to, 1838—Laura De Force Gordon, | California lawyer, editor and suf-| fragist, born in Erie Co., Pa.| Died April 6, 1907. 1864—Edward W. Eberle, admiral, born at Denton, Died July 6, 1929, : Mrs. Harry Richardson and granddaughter Betty Lou John- son, who were spending several weeks in Miami with Mrs. Richard- son’s son ig law and daughter Mr. and MrsNWill Baez, returned ever the highway Saturday even- ing. Mrs. George F. Archer, who was vacationing in Tampa _ with relatives, arrived last night over the highway. She came as far Homestead with her son in law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ar- mando Sanchez and stopped one night with her son and daughter in law Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Ar- cher, Mr. and ‘Mrs. Sanchez will arrive this evening. oc ‘Carl Rom, senior radio electri- cian with the lighthouse depart-} ment, who was on a business trip to Port Everglades, returned by plane yesterday morning. | | i i rear | : Tex. ! 1866—George H. Spencer, lib- jeral New England Methodist-! Episcopal clergyman, born at} Newbury, Vt. Died at’ Cam-! bridge, Mass., Feb. 9, 1936. of My. who was; scholarskip at the Un‘- versity of INinois upon graduat: from Florida Univers: " home last night from" a short vacation with 1 after which he wil! ret sume his studies. Raymond Einhorn, sv": s fidceawas rival | #nd Mrs. Joseph Pinder was an arrivall i vorded by plane yesterday from Miami! and left in the afternoon ac- companying his father George Pinder, who will spend a while in Miami. i 1871—Jesse Lynch Williams, | noted novelist-playwright, born at! Sterling, Ill. Died Sept. 14,: 1929. i arrived cided to give bigger and bet! “Zo 400 values for the last day.of the sale. parents; Tomorrow will be a big buying rn to re-iday in this store-wide event as! additional reductions have been: made on the high-grade merchan. | dise carried at Mendell’s and some | mere ise just received will be} ffered at sale prices sé ... Dont forget, Dearest... bring home A POUND OF FRESH BUTTER _ A DOLEN FRESH EGGS and a Carton of FRESH CIGARETTES ( / mean DOUBLE MELLOW OLD COLDS of co Mrs. Fred Moore and daughter Marilyn, of Nassau, were arrivals on the plane from Miami yester- day and are guests of Dr. and Mrs. Harry N. S. Jones and other re- latives. THOMASINE M. MILLER —BEAUTICIAN— Latest Air Cooled Method Permanents: $2.60 to $10.00 Hair Dyeing a Specialty 407 South St. Phone 574-, , Shirley Cook, formerly con-| Mected twith the First National! \Bank of Key West, but who is now } gmployed bythe Florida National | Bei Bank in Miami, was an ar alldent of Key West, who will leave bere yesterday for a visit with) Wednesdey for North Carolina, relatives and friends, | Mrs. Aguero and daughter will : neces jthen return to Key West, aceom- Miss Madge Sands, daughter ofj panied by her husband, Otto! Mr. and Mrs. Atwood Sands left] Aguero. : over the highway yesterday for). | i Tavernier in company with Mrs| res Dorothy Chalker and son, who} Opens —_ I Itch | Scalp were visiting the Sands family andj } With six itch killing medicines | returned to their home in Miami. in liquid form, Impe Lotion isher,| {ows into pores and hair follicles Fisher.) and thus gets at and kills the | ‘ Mildred,;| cause of scalp itch, 35¢ and 31.00. with Mr. and Mrs. Knight John-| Wanda and George of Glou-! son. From there she will go to} cester City, New Jersey, are guests! New York and returning spend a) of Mrs. Fisher’s parents, Mr. and while with her brother in law and/ Mrs. Charles Mathews at the home sister, Lieutenant Harry Richter.) 526 Grinnell street. This is their U. S. N., and Mrs. Richter, in] first visit to Key West in 13 ye Charleston, S. C. Mrs. Jack Gaiti, was an arrival over the highway Saturday night accompanied by her daughter Miss Macie Gaiti with whom she had Been spending a vacation. Miss Macie will remain for about two weeks, | ! PALACE Marjorie Rambeau in | DIZZY _DIAMES j Chester Morris-Helen Morgen in! FRANKIE AND JOHNNIE Matinee: 10-ie; Night: 15-25¢ et tte, ee tees ai, ‘ Miss Elizabeth .Sharpley left yesterday morning over highway for Chicago, en route to Peoria, Mr. and Mrs. George Tl, where she will spend a while and Children, Ruth, BENJAMIN LOPEZ FUNERAL HOME Serving Key West Half Century 24 Hour Ambulance Service li Licensed Emba:mer H Phone 135 Night 696-0 ' | JOE ALLEN | Notary Public ' Henry B. Haskins, assistant superintendent of lighthouses, and! W. J. Schoneck, assistant light- house engineer, left by plane) —-——-- yesterday afternoon for Miami C1 | | Senne cheetah ten thane cents iene toute to Tampa to be at the YOUR DESTINY BY LE MARS marine railway this morning wheti ithe Tender Ivy was placed in dry- ae | dock for inspection preparatory to A 1936 Reading to The Citizen Readers by Special Ar- semi annual cleaning and _paint- rangements for a Limited Time only TEN CENTS Coin and ES Stamp. THE KEY WEST CITIZEN; KEY WEST, FLA. S. V. McCarthy, who had been spending several days in Miami and other points in that section, returned to Key West Sunday evening over the highway. i She neglected to mention those Prize Crop Tobaccos Of course’it’s wonderful that you can now get strictly fresh cigarettes anywhere in the U.S. A. Thanks to those two jackets of moisture-proof Cellophane on every pack of Double-Mellow Old Golds. But the real charm of “Double-Mellows” is their prize crop tobaccos «i . the very pick of home-grown and im- ported leaf. With a flavor you’ve never met before in a cigarette. . . and one you'll never want to leave! Mrs. Caffrey Saunders, who had been spending a while ing in Miami and other points in that | section, returned to Key West! | last evening over the highway. | | : i { Sidney Einhorn, son of Mr. and | ‘Lionell Plummer, chief clerk Mrs, A. Einhorn, plans taking a with the Lighthouse Department, vacation and will visit at differ-| | | here, accompanied by his wife,! ent points in the state. He ex- and Mrs. Plummer’s parents, Mr. pects to leave tomotrow. and Mrs, Ed R. Roberts, who had been spending a few weeks in |. Mrs. Otto Aguero and daugh- Miami visiting with Joe Plummer,!ter, Ottilie, left over the highway son of Mr. and Mrs. Plimmer, re-| yesterday tmotning for Miami. turned to Key West Sunday even-! Miss Aguero will visit her sister, ing over the highway. iMiss Mary Taylor, a former resi- City and State . Date of Birth i? PRIZE CROP TOBACCOS JACKETS, DOUBLE “CELLOPHANe =e DOUBLE-MELLOW _'“* “*" FACTORY-FRES}

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